Bhimbetka
is an unique archeological site situated 2 km southwest of the tribal
village Bhiyanpura in Raisen district, on the southern tip of the Vindhyachal
mountains 46 kms south - east of Bhopal, the capital of Madhya Pradesh.
Spreading over 10 km in length and about 3 km in width, this site has
more than 700 rock shelters( the largest group in the world), each separated
from the next by a few meters. The paintings in over 500 caves date back
to about 9,000 years and depict the life of the prehistoric cave dwellers
and a smaller number
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from the upper Palaetholic period through the late Mesolithic and to the
historical period, making the Bhimbetika group an archaeological treasure.
The site, with South Asia's richest collection of prehistoric
paintings, considered to be among the oldest Stone Age rock paintings
in the world was declared a UNESCO World heritage site on July 2003, thus
becoming the 22nd site in India to receive the status, along with other
rock cut caves of Ajanta, Ellora and Elephanta.
The name Bhimbetka comes from the Hindu Epic Mahabharata,
Bhim-bait-ka means Bheem (One of the five pandavas ) had rested here when
Pandavas were banished from their kingdom. The Rock Shelters at Bhimbetka
exhibit the earliest traces of human life in India. According to
archaeologists, the caves must have been inhabited over 10,000 years ago.
Surrounded by dense forests and rocky cliffs, the site is spectacular
and is an Ornithologists paradise with its numerous bird species. Of the
rock shelters, about 15 of them are open to the public.
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